Causes of Prostate Cancer
So what are the causes of prostate cancer? Cancer researchers have not been able to identify a direct cause for prostate cancer, but have identified a number of risk-factors, including age, ethnicity, diet, insulin growth factors, and genetics relating to a family history of prostate and breast cancer.
Conversely, Dr Ryke-Geerd Hamer, a famous German doctor who studied the notes of many thousands of cancer patients, was able to identify an “exact” psycho-emotional cause for prostate cancer. This stressful “emotional” event, that occurs approximately 2 years prior to the onset of detectable prostate cancer, is always: an ugly conflict with sexual connections or connotations.
So how then does this very specific “sexual emotional cause” of prostate cancer develop more readily in: a) older men, specifically over the age of 70 years, and in b) those families with a history of breast and prostate cancer? Let us look at both of these.
a) Age, according to most leading cancer researchers, has been identified as the leading risk-factor for developing prostate cancer. Nearly 63% of all those who develop prostate cancer are over the age of 70 years. Prostate cancer is very rare in men who are under the age of 50 years. Only 7% of all men will get prostate cancer, so the epidemic of prostate cancer must be kept into perspective.
There are three “psychological” factors that should be considered here in a general context as to why a man, specifically over the age of 70 years would experience more commonly “an ugly conflict with sexual connections or connotations” in contrast to a man under the age of 50 years, where this type of cancer is extremely uncommon.
The first factor is: the older a man gets, generally the more emotional stress he accumulates and suppresses meaning he is less likely to cope with added stress. Stress is a leading cause of cancer as discussed on the following page: The Cancer Personality.
The second factor is: the older a man gets, generally the more rigid and inflexible he is in his thinking. This inflexibility means a man is at much higher risk of developing stress and therefore, cancer.
The third and by far the most important factor is: the older a man gets, the more stressors he faces with getting older, such as the fear of death, the fear of losing his masculinity, and the fear of no longer being sexually attractive.
It must be understood that the prostate is a SEXUAL ORGAN. And cancer of the prostate therefore has a sexual “emotional cause”. The older a man gets, the greater his mental stress will be on his ability to perform sexually, and on his sexual attractiveness and masculinity which are often tied in together. Any “relationship conflict” an older man experiences will often lead him to think that it is his sexual prowess and masculinity that are deficient.
If he does not cope well with this stress and suppresses the emotions around it, an emotional conflict will then form in his brain that connects to his sexual organ – the prostate. This will cause a cancer chain of events at the cell level that leads to the development of prostate cancer. This cancer chain of events is explained on the following page: Cancer-Stress Link.
b) The emotional cause of all cancers, including prostate cancer is a suppression of anger, hate, resentment and/or grief surrounding a specific emotional traumatic event. In the case of prostate cancer, this specific emotional traumatic event is: an ugly conflict with sexual connections or connotations. Science has pointed to “genetics” or a strong family history of prostate cancer and breast cancer as a leading risk-factor for those who go on to develop prostate cancer.
If your mother or father had developed breast or prostate cancer this would indicate they had an “inability to cope with stress” and suppressed and internalized feelings of anger, hate, resentment and grief that lead to cancer. The inability to “cope” with stress is often an inherited and conditioned family “dis-ease”. If you have been conditioned by your parents not to express your emotions, then you are far more likely to suppress your emotions and go on to develop cancer later in life.
The greatest genetic risk factor a man faces is: if his brother has developed prostate cancer, then he is 3 times more likely to develop prostate cancer. Putting any “genetic link” aside, it stands to reason that both brothers – sharing the same parents – could easily have been conditioned to suppress their emotions from a young age. This would then have set the stage for prostate cancer to develop in both brothers.